
Regarding photographing cars for speeding, mccoy@communities.com (Jim McCoy) notes that a drive could challenge a photo ticket by stating that
"it was not me driving when that photo was taken"
When this was tried in (I believe) Sweden, the driver was told that the ticked would be canceled. Then, he was told that henceforth, he would be *required* to maintain a log of precisely who was driving, the date, time, and the beginning and ending odomoter. Required, that is, as a condition of keeping his license. And that he must produce this log whenever a police officer requested it. Amazing how this improved the driver's memory. There is another problem that these tickets could cause. (This could be an urban legend, of course): a former work collegue was speeding in Switzerland. His wife opened the letter with the ticket -- and photograph. The passenger was not his wife, and the location differed from where my former collegue's wife expected her (soon to be former) husband to be. Drive carefully. Martin Minow minow@apple.com